the world, and most of them channel the effects of testosterone toward specific goals. People are biological creatures who live in social settings, and any good explanation about how testosterone works must be a biosocial one. Biology provides the hormone and its potential effects on our action. But whether we act, and exactly how we act, depends on other factors, including culture.
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Culture is the shared tradition of a group, passed down from one generation to the next. As the human population grew in ancient times, different cultures appeared. At first, people were limited to nearby food and supplies. Gradually they diversified, moving out to hunt animals, herd livestock, farm, develop their knowledge, and finally enter the occupations of the modern world. These developments took a long time. Many cultures rose and fell along the way, and testosterone has been there all along to play its role. Spatial skills at one time guided rocks and spears, and now they guide golf balls, basketballs, airplanes, and rockets. The sexual appetite of primitive man now directs and supports a sex industry. The old desire to dominate makes use of modern tools. A fondness for quick and lethal violence makes modern weapons attractive. The high-testosterone way of thought divides the world into camps of friends and enemies.
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Testosterone is more than an individual trait; it also affects groups of people. People are not solitary creatures, like bears or eagles; we evolved living together in families and tribes, and sociability is part of human nature. People still form groupscommunities, cities, nations, denominations, clubs, associations, parties, regiments, families, and tribesand we are more friendly and comfortable with members of our own group than with outsiders. When trouble arises, group members think in terms of "us" versus "them." Groups decide when to eat dinner, what kind of personal life or business practice will be acceptable, who must fight a war, when to celebrate holidays, and how to treat criminals. In comedian Lily Tomlin's words, "reality is a collective hunch.'' Groups create their own reality, and group members learn special truths from each other. Members must embrace the group's ideology or risk disapproval from the other members of the group. Reality varies from group
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